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Recent posts

Rumpus Articles

  • Features & Reviews

Crime Lit

  • Isaac Fitzgerald
  • March 19, 2010
“The best crime fiction today is actually talking to us about the same things big literary novels are talking about. They are talking about moral questions, taking ordinary people and…
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  • Other

Bedbugs

  • Kailyn McCord
  • March 19, 2010
Sara Faye Lieber’s essay “Bohemian Rhapsody” begins with a meditation on sleep, a most basic and necessary human activity, and goes on to describe how her own becomes impeded by…
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  • Art
  • Features & Reviews

The Sun has Fallen into the Sack

  • Will Schofield
  • March 19, 2010
Illustrations by Elzbieta Gaudasinska for The Sun has Fallen into the Sack by Jerzy Bieniecki (Poland, 1975). As you can see, the book was actually published in English translation —…
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  • Morning Coffee

Morning Coffee

  • Dan Weiss
  • March 19, 2010
Big Picture has a rad look at the buildings of the shanghai expo. US vs UK book covers, no-holds-barred cage match. I heart Japanese train station design. There is no…
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Rumpus Original
  • Sex

An Oral History of Love in Contemporary America: Selections from Us #1

  • John Bowe
  • March 19, 2010
Brigitte Aiton, Age 44 New York, New York “How do you deal with the fact that the person you’re with might hate you?” It was the first summer we were…
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  • Art
  • Features & Reviews

The Heroic Return of the Baffler

  • Michael Berger
  • March 18, 2010
After a hiatus of a few years, the intellectually-engaging, always interesting, often confrontational and downright maverick literary/cultural magazine The Baffler has returned! I just picked up my copy at the…
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  • Features & Reviews

Sensible Worries About the Internet

  • Jeremy Hatch
  • March 18, 2010
“These new books share a concern with how digital media are reshaping our political and social landscape, molding art and entertainment, even affecting the methodology of scholarship and research. They…
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  • Art
  • Other
  • Politics

Totalitarian Kitsch

  • Michael Berger
  • March 18, 2010
“It is the official art of authoritarian governments, aimed at extending state control through propaganda. Totalitarian kitsch exists to glorify the state, foster a personality cult surrounding the dictator and…
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  • Features & Reviews

In Defense Of Horror

  • Michael Berger
  • March 18, 2010
“How certain are you, anyhow, that what you call ‘unpleasantness’ is not a necessary, even crucial, part of our experience? Maybe you should lock yourself up in your heart long…
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  • Dear Sugar
  • Rumpus Original

DEAR SUGAR, The Rumpus Advice Column #28:

  • Sugar
  • March 18, 2010
Jean-Paul Sartre famously said that “hell is other people,” which is true enough, but truer still is hell is other people’s boyfriends (or girlfriends, as the case may be).
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  • Features & Reviews

Lightbulbs to Moons

  • Isaac Fitzgerald
  • March 18, 2010
“As lightbulbs are to the moon, first stories are to finished books.” The Morning News talks with author Philip Graham about publishing his first short story, writing dispatches for McSweeney’s,…
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  • Media

“Some rats are going, most rats are staying.”

  • Isaac Fitzgerald
  • March 18, 2010
Over at The Awl Choire Sicha talks with Paul Ford, the now-former web editor of Harper’s, about why he quit, what’s going on at the magazine (“Jennifer Szalai, a senior…
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The Rumpus publishes original fiction, poetry, literary humor writing, comics, essays, book reviews, and interviews with authors and artists of all kinds. Our mostly volunteer-run magazine strives to be a platform for risk-taking voices and writing that might not find a home elsewhere. We lift up new voices alongside those of more established writers our readers may already know and love. We want to bring new perspectives into the conversation that will make us all look deeper.

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